Described is a process for the separation of a sample mixture for analytical reason based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The method is involving a first separation in a first gel strip on the basis of isoelectric points and a second separation in a second gel on the basis of molecular size. When starting the separation in the second dimension the buffer solution for transferring the compounds separated in the first dimension into the second dimension gel is containing sodium dodecyl-sulfate (SDS) and by applying an electric field the SDS migrates electrokinetically into the first gel strip, and the compounds are being complexed simultaneously with SDS.
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1. A two-dimension method for separating compounds present in a sample mixture, the method comprising in the following order:
(a) separating the compounds in a first-dimension gel strip on the basis of isoelectric points,
at least partially contacting the first-dimension gel strip with a gel solution and performing a polymerization to obtain a second-dimension gel in contact with the first-dimension gel strip,
(b) contacting the separated compounds in the first-dimension gel strip with a first buffer solution comprising sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS),
(c) applying an electric field to electrokinetically migrate the SDS into and through the first-dimension gel strip in a flow direction from a backside to a frontside of the first-dimension gel strip toward the second-dimension gel, wherein the separated compounds complex with the migrating SDS to form SDS-complexed compounds and are at least partially compacted at the front side of the first-dimension gel strip before migration into the second-dimension gel, and
(d) separating the SDS-complexed compounds in the second-dimension gel on the basis of molecular size, wherein the SDS in the first buffer solution is present at a concentration higher than in a running buffer used in the second dimension.
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This application claims priority to EP 05007912.8 filed Apr. 11, 2005.
The present invention refers to a process for the separation of a sample mixture for analytical reason based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, in particular to an improved method in proteomics based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis and suggests a system or ways for integration and automation.
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2D-GE), since first published as a technique by O'Farrell (O'Farrell, P. H., J. Biol. Chem. 250:4007-21, 1975), has been for nearly 30 years the work horse in proteomics analysis, documented by thousands of application papers, and the object of numerous development and optimization attempts. Improvements occurred indeed and although alternative techniques, based on a different approach such as multidimensional chromatography directly coupled to mass spectrometry, are gaining popularity, 2D-GE is in fact still the most used technique and it might be still for several years if further improvements are achieved. Describing the details and advantages of 2D-GE in all its various forms is out of the scope of this invention as several reviews can be retrieved in the literature. It is however important to point out what the limitations of the general method still are and for this a general description of the process is only given.
Briefly the first dimension separation consists of isoelectric focusing (IEF) where proteins separate according to their isoelectric points in a pH gradient, typically immobilized (IPG), in a long and narrow supported gel assuming the form and taking the name of strip. The strips, commercially available, are normally supplied in a semi-dry state and they have to be rehydrated with the sample solution before analysis. This operation takes from a few hours to typically overnight and usually takes place under mineral oil to prevent drying and crystallization of urea present in the sample solution. IEF takes place also under mineral oil for the same reasons in the same or a different tray with the strip in contact with two electrodes at the sides, between which a high voltage is applied. After IEF the strip has to be equilibrated, which means that the proteins focused within the strip have to be first alkylated and then complexed with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in order to be later transferred to the second dimension gel and separated according to size. Reduction/alkylation can be achieved by different reagents and one has the option to perform this step during sample preparation before rehydration. It is actually recommended to do so (Herbert et al., Electrophoresis 22:2046-2057, 2001). However SDS equilibration can be performed only after IEF, so that the strip is literally washed for several minutes in the equilibration solution containing SDS. This is then placed on top and in contact with a prepolymerized SDS polyacrylamide gel and coupling is normally achieved by pouring a hot agarose solution over the strip. This is usually accomplished between two glass plates which are clamped together and then placed in a buffer containing cassette where voltage is applied across the gel. The gel might be formed with a porosity gradient in order to increase resolution in the second dimension. After this is complete, the gel is removed, fixed, stained and background staining dye removed before proceeding eventually with the subsequent steps, i.e. spot picking, digesting and mass spectrometry analysis.
All this is not only a time-consuming and laborious procedure, requiring trained personnel, but just because there is much manual work involved, reproducibility is still the major issue, as gels are mostly made to be compared. Although running conditions can be quite reproducible as these are controlled by proper set-up and power supplies, especially if fresh buffers are used all the time, problems with accuracy and consistency can arise from variations in the other numerous parameters to keep under control. For example, storage time (degradation) of precast gels prior to use, sample loading and rehydration, in terms of sample amount, losses, and homogeneity of the strip, strip handling with risk of damaging and contamination, equilibration between first and second dimension with risk of loosing sample and resolution, imprecise coupling to the gel, gel casting and polymerization, in terms of homogeneity, air sensitivity and risk to trap bubbles causing consequently also field inhomogeneities.
Ideally, what is desirable is that no further manual intervention is required after the sample has been loaded and that the overall process time is also reduced with the possibility to run several gels in parallel and increase not only the reproducibility but also the throughput while reducing the cost per gel. Automation and integration of the steps of this complex procedure is a challenge that others have already faced. Approaches making use of channels for separations instead of gels are not considered here as they are not directly comparable, neither are their performances, and because different parameters and limitations come into play.
An integrated, fully automated, system mimicking step by step the manual procedure, including also sample preparation and strip casting is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,554,991 B1. The robotic machinery behind it, the complexity of the operation and the investment necessary go however far beyond a practical and widespread use of it, especially among the smaller research laboratories. US 2003/0127331 discloses a system where the strip once cast at the bottom of a vertical mold formed by two plates doesn't have to be moved after IEF. It is understood that the strip can be treated with the equilibration solution, apparently just from one side, and subsequently coupled to the second dimension gel by pouring the gel solution into the mold directly in contact with the strip or on top of an agarose layer. Doubts remain however concerning the efficiency and/or the time of the equilibration with the SDS having to diffuse inside the strip just from one side and whether the resolution obtained in the first dimension can be preserved. As no mention is made concerning the polymerization method, the long times associated with the classical method increase further the concern about loss of resolution. Also, the way the strip is formed and the sample is added is less reproducible and the fact that a sealing tab at the bottom of the mold has to be removed at the end is not practical. In EP 0366897 it is proposed that the strip is first separated from a prepolymerized gel by means of a non-conductive phase-change material, which is melted after IEF by increasing the temperature, removed and substituted with other gel medium. No reference is however made to the equilibration step and besides the concerns about the effect of the temperature for proteins and gel, remains the problem associated with closing and opening this time the top of the mold. Other barrier means between strip and gel are proposed in WO 02/084273 A1. The first embodiment reported therein making use of sliding solid barriers is certainly not the most advantageous as formed gels might be disrupted by this action. More interesting solutions make use of pneumatically assisted valves consisting of soft and expandable material or of semi-walls at the sides of the strip, which is physically bound as well as the gel on a flexible and peelable foil. This foil can change position relative to the opposite rigid surface, thus opening and closing the strip chamber. The gel solution is in this case introduced and polymerized after opening the strip chamber at the end of the first dimension. Equilibration solutions can access the strip through slits correspondingly positioned on the rigid part of the device. An automated system eventually based on this principle will be commercialized by Nextgen Sciences in the near future. This however reproduces also the same steps which are otherwise carried out manually, thus demanding a certain complexity due to valves and moving parts and adding cost for the instrument, also this less affordable. Other weak points of this system are represented by dead volumes for the sample, certain loss of resolution due to the equilibration between first and second dimension and the long waiting time for gel polymerization. Within the U.S. Pat. No. 6,277,259 an automated two dimensional gel electrophoresis of proteins is described, using thin linear gels. The protein sample is dissolved and complexed and processed in a first dimension separation followed by migration into a second dimension separation, labelled by a dye e.g. a fluorescent labelling to enable detecting the proteinaceous sample during second dimension separation. Within the WO 03/092846 a two dimensional analysis in a micro fluidic format using microchannels is described for performing two dimensional separations.
A cheaper, simpler, quicker and equally integrated solution in the form of a disposable, specially designed for minigel format is offered by Roche Diagnostics as described in a previous not yet published EP application (EP 04 015 469.2 attached to this application).
It is consequently object of the present invention to propose an improved method in proteomics based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis and a respective system or respective ways enabling at least partial automation and integration of the above described steps and helping to overcome the problems and disadvantages described above related to the process steps known in the state of the art, which are by the majority still manually executed.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a process for the separation of a sample mixture for analytical reason based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, the method involving a first separation in a first gel strip on the basis of isoelectric points and a second separation in a second gel on the basis of molecular size characterized in that when starting the separation in the second dimension, a buffer solution, for transferring the compounds separated in the first dimension into the second dimension gel, is containing sodium-dodecyl-sulfate (SDS) and that by applying an electric field the SDS migrates electrokinetically into the first gel strip, and the compounds are being complexed simultaneously with SDS. The present invention further provides an analytical system for the separation of a sample mixture for analytical reason based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, wherein a first gel strip is used consisting of a hydrophilic material.
The present invention refers to a new generation of the previous disposable and automation concept, achieving increased simplicity, reducing further the costs and offering higher resolution and reproducibility. In order to achieve this, a modification of the general method, as described above, was necessary. The description of the invention is thereby the description of a method where possible conditions and embodiments are suggested at each step in order to obtain an integrated and automated system.
For simplification reasons and for the better understanding of the present invention the various method or process steps for the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis are described in operational sequence. Below is a brief list of the steps involved during the execution of the developed method followed by a discussion for each of them:
Within the following description of the various steps also reference is made to the attached drawings, in which examples of possible embodiments and parts of the inventively developed system or device respectively are shown.
Step 1
Reduction/alkylation is performed just before sample loading as the last step of the sample preparation according to Sebastiano et al., Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 17:2380-2386, 2003. Same reducing and alkylating reagents, i.e. tributylphosphine (TBP) and vinyl pirydine (VP) are preferably used, although with a slight modification of the method. It has been found that it is not necessary to buffer the sample solution for the alkylation reaction to occur, thus avoiding a useless increase of the salt concentration that would result in high current and longer IEF times unless desalting is carried out. Moreover, it is considered more efficient to add TPB and VP in two consecutive steps rather than simultaneously since the two reagents can react with each other. In this way, shorter reaction times, e.g. overall 30 min, are also needed. As an example, a typical solution used to solubilize the protein sample, with variations of course allowed, consists of:
Thiourea
2 M
Urea
7 M
CHAPS
2% (w/v)
Bio-Lyte ® 3/10 Ampholytes
0.5% (v/v)
Bromophenol Blue
0.002% (w/v)
1,2-propandiol
20%
To this, TBP is added e.g. first in concentration of 5 mM for about 10 min, followed by addition of VP 20 mM final concentration for about 20 min and again TBP in sufficient molar amount to quench the excess of the previous reagent, rather than a different reducing agent such as dithioerythryol (DTE).
The function of the 1,2 propandiol, which is a favorite additive among others possible as, e.g., glycerol, PEG, diethylenglycole, is to minimize EOF during IEF while maintaining the viscosity of the sample solution low, which is important for the sample loading step as will be seen below.
Step 2
The sample, e.g. in the solution above, is inserted such as e.g. pipetted into a small sample well from which the sample can get in contact with the strip and the internal surface of the disposable body directly facing the strip and be guided as proposed according to the present invention by capillary hydrophilic forces between such surface and the semi-dry strip filling entirely the volume so defined and shown in
Step 3
To be noticed is the fact that the strip 7 has not to be closed at its sides by any valves. Evaporation is minimized because the gel mold is nearly closed at all sides and because temperature is preferably kept cool during IEF being the disposable positioned e.g. on a cooling plate. Commercially available strips can be used, which would be already integrated in the closed compact disposable or otherwise separately supplied attached to the cover, which would close the main disposable body. Strips may also be polymerized in situ using the same system of hydrophilic guiding, this time on both surfaces, or otherwise a hydrophilic neutral porous material, e.g. a membrane with a strip shape. In this case, however, instead of passive rehydration we would have an active sample loading. Disclosed here is also a new IEF medium, which might be premixed with the sample solution, guided as above to assume a strip shape and capable of gelling when increasing the temperature slightly above room temperature. A medium with this characteristic is a block copolymer of ethylene oxide and propylene oxide belonging to the class of commercially available products known as Pluronics from BASF. A possibly suitable one is e.g. Pluronic F127 at a concentration of about 20% or above when mixed with a sample solution such as that described above. This product besides other commercial applications has already been used as efficient sieving medium in capillary electrophoresis of oligonucleotides and sometimes of peptides but was never used for IEF of proteins. A normal characteristic of this copolymer when dissolved in water solution at a critical concentration is to be liquid at low temperature, typically <5° C. and become a sort of liquid crystalline gel at room temperature. The presence of urea, thiourea, ampholytes and detergents in the sample solution shifts the gelling point above 30-35° C., thus making the liquid, although viscous, easy to handle and guide at room temperature. Both in capillary electrophoresis and in the shape of a strip it was possible to obtain nicely focused proteins as shown in
Step 4
A problem experienced, at least with commercial strips, is represented by an irreproducible second dimension when the strip and the second dimension gel, polymerized directly in contact with the strip, have the same thickness. On one hand a spacing of the mold corresponding to the thickness of the rehydrated strip is necessary in order to introduce the right amount of sample, rely on a good capillary force and perform a good first dimension analysis. On the other hand a small space above the strip is required to achieve proper coupling with the gel and perform a good second dimension analysis. To solve this problem, three possible solutions are shown schematically in
Step 5
For more controllable gel casting this step is preferably carried out vertically, which means that the instrument will operate a 90° rotation of the disposable. The introduction of the gel solution can occur through proper tubing fitting or needle either from the bottom to the top or from the top to the bottom and the strip may find itself located at any of the four sides relative to the vertical mold. In this way the gel solution will fill completely the mold, at least partially contacting, covering and/or enclosing the strip and it is preferable in order to maintain the resolution of the first dimension and diffusion of acrylamide inside the strip, with possible crosslinking to the sample, that polymerization occurs rapidly. For this reason the traditional method, making use of ammonium persulfate (APS) and N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylene-diamine (TEMED) as initiator and catalyst respectively of radical polymerization, is not preferred because these reagents have to be added and mixed at the last moment as they start immediately polymerization already during casting and because the reaction proceeds slowly taking normally more than one hour to be completed. Ideally, the gel solution contains already the reagents for polymerization and is stable under storage conditions; important is also that once the reaction is triggered, e.g. by external energy source, this proceeds fast, while maintaining the characteristics of the traditional sieving gel. This can be achieved for instance by UV-initiated polymerization choosing an intiator that is stable in the acrylamide gel solution until exposed to a light source whose wavelength range comprises its absorbance spectrum. UV transparent materials should be thereby used for the disposable. As these compounds are generally not polar, hence poorly soluble in aqueous solution, a modification of the gel solution is necessary. For example up to 10% diethylenglycole without compromising the performance of the gel can be used. A suitable initiator is for example 2,2′-dimethoxy-2-phenyl-acetophenone (DMPA) at concentration of 0.05% or below. By this, exposure of the gel mold to UVA light of sufficient power results in complete polymerization in less than 5 min.
Although photopolymerization itself is not new, it was never applied to our knowledge to two-dimensional gel based proteomics.
Steps 6 and 7
At this point the strip is coupled to the gel with the proteins focused in bands within the strip at their isoelectric points. This means however that carrying a zero net charge they won't be able to be transferred to the gel for the second dimension analysis. They have indeed been previously alkylated but are not yet complexed with Sodium-dodecyl-sulfate (SDS), which gives them a net negative charge and binds to them with a constant ratio allowing them to be separated now according to size through the sieving matrix of the gel. One way to bring SDS to the proteins is electrokinecally from the cathodic buffer reservoir. A concentration of SDS higher than that present in the running buffer is however necessary, e.g. 2% versus 0.1 or 0%. This has two implications: first the buffer at the cathode needs to be replaced or diluted after electrokinetic equilibration, second the distance of the strip from the buffer should preferably be small (e.g. <5 mm) in order to minimize the zone at high SDS concentration entering the gel. The resulting effect is however superior to the standard procedure. As the SDS migrates into the gel and encounters the protein bands, these start to mobilize from the tail while the head is still steady. The result is a stacking effect with the bands gradually compacting at the opposite side of the strip before beginning their migration and separation inside the gel, which in turn means a gain in resolution. In that respect
The way of bringing SDS electrokinetically to mobilize focused proteins is not new. There is one previous published work (Li et al., Anal. Chem. 76:742-48, 2004) in which however a different system is described with proteins focused first in a microfluidic channel and where SDS elctrokinetically introduced is necessary to inject separate zones into side channels. Here instead the first application to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis is reported and for the first time this stacking effect between strip and gel is described.
Steps 8 and 9
From sample loading to this point all steps could be automated. Once the second dimension run is completed, the user can remove manually the disposable from the instrument and take the gel off. Preferably, for easier handling, the gel remains attached to one of the surfaces of the mold, either the disposable body or the covering plane, which can consist either of a rigid plate, e.g. glass or polymer, or a polymeric more flexible foil. The surface where the gel sticks has to be consequently chemically accessible by polymerization process while the other has to be chemically inert towards the radical polymerization. The supported gel can be then processed according to the traditional procedure for fixing and staining.
A method is here disclosed for two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, which offers the following advantages over the prior art:
Even if all the various new aspects and advantages have been described step by step above in an overall method or process respectively for the execution of a two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis, some of the inventively new aspects of the individual process steps can be taken independently into consideration, which means could be combined with process steps as known out of the state of the art. In principal the various independent aspects, which are new and inventive over the prior art could be considered as individual inventions, which not necessarily have to be combined with all the other new and inventive aspects as disclosed above.
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